NASA's Top Science, Exploration and Discovery Stories of 2008

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Dec. 15, 2008

Michael Cabbage/Stephanie Schierholz 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1600 
mcabbage@xxxxxxxx, stephanie.schierholz@xxxxxxxx   

RELEASE: 08-322

NASA'S TOP SCIENCE, EXPLORATION AND DISCOVERY STORIES OF 2008

WASHINGTON -- NASA landed on Mars, photographed distant worlds, added 
to the International Space Station, took part in a lunar science 
mission with India and made major progress toward returning 
astronauts to the moon as the agency celebrated its 50th birthday in 
2008. Here on Earth, NASA researchers recorded the continued decline 
of Arctic sea ice, won awards for aviation breakthroughs, discovered 
the cause of storms that brighten the Northern Lights and helped 
create state-of-the-art swimsuits worn by Olympic gold medalists. Ten 
of the top accomplishments of America's space agency in its golden 
anniversary year are listed below: 

INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION NEARS COMPLETION ON 10TH ANNIVERSARY  
NASA completed four space shuttle missions in 2008 to deliver modules 
and hardware to the International Space Station, allowing it to grow 
in size, volume and science capability. The flights also prepared the 
station to house six crew members for long-duration missions and to 
expand scientific exploration. The activation in 2008 of the European 
Space Agency's Columbus module and Jules Verne Automated Transfer 
Vehicle, as well as the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Kibo 
laboratory, marked the beginning of new human spaceflight control 
centers in Germany, France and Japan that are working with existing 
control centers in the U.S., Russia and Canada. Nov. 20 was the 10th 
anniversary of the launch of Zarya, a Russian control module that was 
the station's first component. In the decade since Zarya arrived in 
orbit, the station has grown to become the largest spacecraft ever 
built. Its mass has expanded to more than 313 tons, and its interior 
volume is more than 25,000 cubic feet, comparable to the size of a 
five-bedroom house. The station now hosts 19 research facilities, 
including nine sponsored by NASA, eight by European Space Agency and 
two by Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. 



http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/10th_main.html 


PHOENIX WRAPS UP SUCCESSFUL MISSION TO MARS  
NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander ceased communications Nov. 2 after 
successfully returning unprecedented science data to Earth. Launched 
Aug. 4, 2007, Phoenix safely touched down on Mars on May 25, 2008, at 
a site farther north than where any previous spacecraft had landed. 
Phoenix's soft landing on Mars was the first in 32 years and only the 
third in history. Cameras on Phoenix sent more than 25,000 images 
back to Earth. Preliminary science data shed light on whether the 
Martian arctic environment ever has been favorable for microbes; 
documented a mildly alkaline soil environment unlike any found by 
earlier missions; discovered small concentrations of salts that could 
be nutrients for life; located calcium carbonate; and detected 
perchlorate salt. The findings also advanced the goal of documenting 
the history of water on Mars. Phoenix exceeded its planned 
operational life of three to five months. Analysis of data from its 
instruments continues. 



http://www.nasa.gov/phoenix 


ARES I ROCKET PASSES IMPORTANT DESIGN MILESTONE 
NASA successfully completed the preliminary design review for the new 
Ares I rocket in 2008. Starting in 2015, the rocket will launch the 
Orion crew exploration vehicle, its crew of four to six astronauts, 
and small payloads to the International Space Station. The rocket 
also will be used as part of missions to explore the moon and beyond 
in coming decades. The preliminary design review is the first such 
milestone in more than 35 years for a U.S. rocket that will carry 
astronauts into space. The review examined the design of Ares I to 
confirm the planned technical approach will meet NASA's requirements 
for the fully integrated vehicle and ensure all of the rocket's 
components and supporting systems are designed to work together. NASA 
is preparing for the rocket's first test flight in 2009. Hardware for 
the test flight, including the forward skirt and the upper stage 
simulator, began arriving at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida 
this fall. 



http://www.nasa.gov/ares 


ARCTIC SEA ICE DECLINE CONTINUES  
In September, Arctic sea ice coverage reached the second-lowest level 
recorded since the dawn of the satellite era, according to 
observations from the NASA-supported National Snow and Ice Data 
Center at the University of Colorado. While slightly above the 
record-low set in September 2007, this season further reinforces the 
strong negative trend in summer sea ice coverage observed during the 
past 30 years. In March, when the Arctic reached its annual maximum 
sea ice coverage during the winter, scientists from NASA and the data 
center reported that thick, older sea ice was continuing to decline. 
NASA developed the capability to observe the extent and concentration 
of sea ice from space using passive microwave sensors. 



http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2008/sep/HQ_08234_Artic_Sea_Ice.html  


LIGHTING UP THE NIGHT  
Researchers using a fleet of five NASA satellites discovered in 2008 
that explosions of magnetic energy occurring a third of the way to 
the moon power substorms that cause sudden brightenings and rapid 
movements of the aurora borealis, or Northern Lights. The cause is 
magnetic reconnection, a common process that occurs throughout the 
universe when stressed magnetic field lines suddenly snap to a new 
shape, like a rubber band that has been stretched too far. These 
substorms often accompany intense space storms that can cause power 
outages and disrupt radio communications and global positioning 
system signals. Scientists are studying the beginning of substorms 
using a network of 20 ground observatories located throughout Canada 
and Alaska and five THEMIS, or Time History of Events and Macroscale 
Interactions during Substorms, satellites. 



http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/auroras/themis_power.html 


HUBBLE FINDS PLANET CIRCLING A DISTANT STAR  
Astronomers announced in 2008 that NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has 
taken the first visible-light snapshot of a planet circling another 
star. Observations taken 21 months apart by the coronagraph on 
Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys showed the object orbiting 
around a star named Fomalhaut. The planet, called Fomalhaut b, is 
approximately 10 times the distance of Saturn from our sun. Estimated 
to be as much as three times Jupiter's mass, Fomalhaut b is located 
25 light-years away in the constellation Piscis Australis, or the 
"Southern Fish." Fomalhaut has been a candidate for planet hunting 
since an excess of dust was discovered around the star in the early 
1980s by NASA's Infrared Astronomy Satellite. The planet is brighter 
than expected for an object of three Jupiter masses. One possibility 
is that it has a Saturn-like ring of ice and dust reflecting 
starlight. Scientists theorize that the ring might eventually 
coalesce to form moons. 



http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/hubble/science/fomalhaut.html 


NASA COMPLETES FIRST TESTS ON NEXT-GENERATION ROCKET ENGINE 
NASA engineers successfully completed in 2008 the first series of 
tests in the early development of the J-2X engine that will power the 
upper stages of the Ares I and Ares V rockets. Ares I will launch the 
Orion spacecraft that will take astronauts to the International Space 
Station and on to the moon by 2020. Ares V will carry cargo and 
components into orbit for trips to the moon and later to Mars. NASA 
conducted nine tests of heritage J-2 engine components from December 
to May as part of a series designed to verify J-2 performance data 
and explore performance boundaries. Engineers at NASA's Stennis Space 
Center near Bay St. Louis, Miss., conducted the tests on a heritage 
J-2 "powerpack," which, in a fully assembled engine, pumps liquid 
hydrogen and liquid oxygen into the engine's main combustion chamber 
to produce thrust. The test hardware consisted of J-2 components used 
from the Apollo program in the1960s through the X-33 program in the 
1990s. 



http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2008/may/HQ_08116_power_pack_tests.html 


NASA TEAM A RECIPIENT OF CELEBRATED COLLIER TROPHY 
NASA was part of a team that received one of the most prestigious 
awards in aviation in June. Judges for the Robert J. Collier Trophy, 
awarded by the National Aeronautic Association, chose the Automatic 
Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast, or ADS-B, team of public and 
private groups to receive the 2007 honor. According to the selection 
committee, "ADS-B is a ground-breaking effort for next-generation 
airborne surveillance and cockpit avionics. Its implementation will 
have a broad impact on the safety, capacity and efficiency of the 
national airspace system." Researchers at NASA's Ames Research Center 
in Moffett Field, Calif., and NASA's Langley Research Center in 
Hampton, Va., were part of the extensive team that developed and 
tested ADS-B. 



http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2008/jun/HQ_08148_Collier_Trophy.html 


NASA RETURNS TO THE MOON WITH INSTRUMENTS ON INDIAN SPACECRAFT  
NASA has partnered with India to fly two science instruments aboard 
the country's first lunar explorer, Chandrayaan-1. The Indian Space 
Research Organization launched Chandrayaan-1 on Oct. 22 from 
Sriharikota, India. It entered lunar orbit on Nov. 8. NASA's Moon 
Mineralogy Mapper is surveying mineral resources of the moon, and the 
Miniature Synthetic Aperture Radar is mapping the moon's polar 
regions and looking for ice deposits in the permanently shadowed 
craters. Data from the two instruments is contributing to NASA's 
increased understanding of the lunar environment as the agency 
implements the nation's space exploration policy, which calls for 
robotic and human missions to the moon. 



http://moonmineralogymapper.jpl.nasa.gov/ 




http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/Mini-RF/main/index.html 


NASA TESTS HELP RECORD-BREAKING OLYMPIANS ROCKET THROUGH WATER  
NASA know-how helped swimsuit designers create a body suit worn by an 
assortment of gold medalists and world record holders at the 2008 
Summer Olympics in Beijing. Among the medalists wearing Speedo's LZR 
Racer were Americans Michael Phelps -- winner of more Olympic gold 
medals than any athlete in the modern era -- and Natalie Coughlin. 
Aerospace engineer Steve Wilkinson at NASA's Langley Research Center 
in Hampton, Va., played a role in developing the swimsuit by testing 
dozens of fabrics in Langley's 7-by-11-inch low speed wind tunnel. 
Warnaco Inc., the U.S. licensee of the Speedo swimwear brand, 
approached Langley to test fabric samples because the NASA center has 
researched drag reduction for aircraft and boats for decades. Just as 
reducing drag helps planes fly more efficiently, reducing drag helps 
swimmers go faster. Studies indicate viscous drag or skin friction is 
almost a third of the total restraining force on a swimmer. Wind 
tunnel tests measured the drag on the surface of the fabrics. 
Speedo's research and development team, Aqualab, took the results and 
used them to help create advanced "space-age" swimsuit designs. 



http://www.nasa.gov/topics/technology/features/2008-0813-swimsuit.html 




NASA Television's Video File newsfeed will include items featuring 
these top stories beginning at 12 p.m. EST today, Dec. 15. For NASA 
TV streaming video, schedules, and downlink information, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/ntv 


Visitors to NASA's Web site can vote on the top NASA story of the year 
at: 



http://www.nasa.gov/news/08_YIR_poll.html 

	
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